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Trump Media Libel Lawsuit Against Washington Post Dismissed, but Might Be Refiled With More Detailed "Actual Malice" Allegations
From today's opinion in Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. v. WP Co. LLC, decided by Judge Tom Barber (M.D. Fla.):
This lawsuit for defamation by Plaintiff Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. ("TMTG") against Defendant WP Company LLC (the "Post") arises from an article titled "Trust linked to porn-friendly bank could gain a stake in Trump's Truth Social," published by the Post on May 13, 2023, and circulated on Twitter (now known as "X") by Post personnel. The article described events related to a contemplated merger between TMTG and Digital World Acquisition Corp. ("DWAC") as part of taking TMTG's "Truth Social" business public.
The article noted there had been a delay in obtaining SEC approval for the merger, which supporters of former President Donald Trump and TMTG attributed to political bias. The article offered an alternative explanation: concerns over a loan or loans obtained by TMTG, the identities of the lenders, and whether those loans had been properly disclosed by DWAC in its public filings. The article cited various sources for its story, including "internal documents a company whistleblower has shared with federal investigators and [the Post]" and statements expressly attributed to the whistleblower, former TMTG officer Will Wilkerson.
The article related that in late 2021, with the proposed merger "frozen" and TMTG concerned about paying its bills, DWAC president Patrick Orlando announced he had arranged for $8 million in loans from an entity known as "ES Family Trust." According to the article, the loans were part of a deal in which TMTG would receive the loans, and in exchange, ES Family Trust would acquire an equity interest in the public entity to be formed from the merger of TMTG and DWAC. This loan-for-stock deal was reflected, according to the article, in a convertible promissory note, although the article acknowledged that the only copy of the note the Post had been able to locate was unsigned. The article also reported that some of the funds were wired by another entity, Paxum Bank, which had ties to ES Family Trust and to the adult film industry. Also, according to the article, TMTG paid a finder's fee of $240,000 in connection with the loans to Entoro Securities, a Texas entity of which Orlando was a managing director.
The article stated that neither the loan-for-stock deal nor the finder's fee had been disclosed to shareholders of DWAC or the SEC, and that New York University law professor Michael Ohlrogge opined that these matters could affect the value of the shares and should have been disclosed. The article also noted that the British journal The Guardian had earlier reported that federal prosecutors in New York were investigating whether TMTG violated money laundering statutes in connection with these loans, and that TMTG Chief Executive Officer Devin Nunes filed a lawsuit against Wilkerson and others (including The Guardian) asserting that the Guardian story was "fabricated."
TMTG sued for libel, but the court concluded that it hadn't adequately alleged knowing or reckless falsehood (so-called "actual malice"), though it concluded that the matter was close as to some allegations, and allowed plaintiff to file an amended complaint that could provide such allegations (assuming there was a plausible basis for them).
The court also discussed the Post's "neutral reporting privilege" argument, and partly accepted it but partly rejected it:
As an alternative ground for dismissal, the Post asserts the entire article is protected by the "neutral reporting privilege," a qualified privilege under Florida law for "disinterested" and "neutral" reporting on "matters of public concern." The few Florida cases on this issue contain seemingly very broad statements of this privilege. However, this broad language cannot be taken out of the factual context in which the courts have applied the privilege. The privilege has been applied in situations in which a media defendant has republished a defamatory statement made by another person, where the making of the statement itself was a newsworthy event.
The Post tries to bring itself within these cases, relying principally on Rendon v. Bloomberg, L.P. (S.D. Fla 2019). In Rendon, the defendant published an article relating the statements of a hacker who claimed he was hired by a political consultant to engage in cyber-attacks against political opponents. The consultant sued the publisher of the article. The district court dismissed the complaint, noting that the article consistently made it clear that the matters reported did not reflect the reporters' opinions but those of their source, the hacker. The court also noted that the article reported that the plaintiff denied the hacker's allegations, and that it reported that emails the hacker had provided were "fake." …
The Court agrees with TMTG that the neutral reporting privilege does not apply, at least not to the entire article or all the challenged statements. The article does not simply republish statements made by Wilkerson or relate his point of view. It attributes only certain specific statements to Wilkerson, and the challenged statements are not among them. Instead, the challenged statements are presented as the Post's own conclusions or inferences based on its review of admittedly "inconclusive" documents, the statements expressly attributed to Wilkerson, and whatever other evidence the Post may have gathered from Wilkerson or other sources. TMTG is correct that the article appears to "take sides" to that extent.
The exception to the foregoing would appear to be the Investigation Statement, which recites The Guardian's report of a money laundering investigation. The Guardian has been described as a "well respected, left-of-center, nationally circulated newspaper generally regarded as being among the top three or four newspapers in Great Britain." The Guardian's report and Nunes's denial in the lawsuit he filed, particularly in the context of public discussion of the reason for the SEC's delay in approving the merger, are independently newsworthy and touch on an area of public interest. In the Investigation Statement, the Post merely recited the opposing positions of both sides on this narrow issue. This aspect of the article appears to fit squarely within the type of reporting to which the neutral reporting privilege has been applied.
The parties agree that the neutral reporting privilege is a qualified privilege. Even if the privilege would otherwise apply, it may be defeated where the defendant abused the privilege by acting with express malice, that is, with the primary motive of injuring the plaintiff. TMTG argues that the Post abused any privilege because it published the statements "maliciously and excessively" and that it intended to injure TMTG. Under the Twombly/Iqbal standard, TMTG must plead facts to plausibly suggest the Post acted with a primary intent or motive to injure TMTG in order to negate the privilege, but it does not do so in its current complaint….
The court concluded:
Defamation is a highly technical and often confusing area of the law, and case law imposes unusual obstacles on a public figure plaintiff suing a media defendant. TMTG, however, may file an amended complaint to attempt to surmount those obstacles. In any amended complaint, as to each challenged statement, TMTG should clearly allege what aspect of the statement is false, what documents or other information demonstrate the specific aspect was false, and how the Post was aware of the documents or information.
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Kevin Drum tallied Trump’s court cases since 2016. You can see the list via the link below. The current score?
85 cases,
01 victory,
07 ongoing,
77 losses,
The one win was over Mary Trump over her exclusion from a will.
The numbers are (of course) bloated by the 62 lawsuits over the 2020 election.
https://jabberwocking.com/raw-data-all-the-major-trump-court-cases-since-2016/
Trump does have some barrel-bottom lawyers. Well, there are some people who will roll those dice and hope they get paid for filing loser cases.
I don't maintain a client trust account, because ugh, the liability. I bill my clients after the work is done. I have never been stiffed ... because I'm not foolish enough to take on Trump work on a handshake.
I have no opinion on the validity of the alleged defamation. That being said, since trump is a public figure , the harde hanks standard governs. Therefore, assuming that the statement about trump is false, there is sufficient information available in the public arena, that would give the alleged defamer reason to believe his statement is true. Note that I am assuming the statement was false solely to illustrate the governing standard set out in harde hanks. further I have no opinion on the truth or falseness of the alleged statement. )
Could you please restate that diatribe, perhaps in comprehensible and focused English this time?
I also do not maintain a client trust account. (When practicing at a large firm, though, a client trust account seemed unavoidable and I never really thought about it much because administrative professionals handled the housekeeping.)
Today, it's not just liability concerns. It's also aggravation and accounting obligations. I do not fault those who maintain trust accounts -- practice in some areas seems to rely on them, some lawyers can't avoid untrustworthy clients, etc.-- but I am grateful for being able to avoid them.
Oh, sure. Same here, and apologies for being imprecise with my language. Also exp when I worked in an AmLaw 100 firm - there were people who did that, and I never had to. But as a solo practitioner, it's the entire set of liability, accounting, reporting to state bar, etc. "Aggravations" is probably a better catch-all than "liability". I am lucky enough to work with clients I can send a 5 figure bill for a month (even if those are rarer than I'd like ... 4 figs is more common), and they pay it without blinking.
Have you considered monthly fees rather than hourly fees?
I strongly recommend them in appropriate circumstances (with sensible conditions).
Why Donald Trump can't get a top-tier lawyer Alan Dershowitz
"There is a nefarious group that calls itself The 65 Project that has as its goal to intimidate lawyers into not representing Trump or anyone associated with him.
They have threatened to file bar charges against any such lawyers.
When these threats first emerged, I wrote an op-ed offering to defend pro bono any lawyers that The 65 Project goes after. So The 65 Project immediately went after me, and contrived a charge based on a case in which I was a constitutional consultant, but designed to send a message to potential Trump lawyers: if you defend Trump or anyone associated with him, we will target you and find something to charge you with. The lawyers to whom I spoke are fully aware of this threat -- and they are taking it seriously."
Dershowitz is off his rocker though. Quoting him for authority is not going to convince anyone of anything.
Dersh conveniently mis-characterizes the group as being "against Trump", but the actual purpose of the group is to protect the integrity of the democratic process:
"The 65 Project is a bi-partisan effort to protect democracy and preserve the rule of law by deterring future attacks on our electoral system. We are holding accountable Big Lie Lawyers who bring fraudulent and malicious lawsuits to overturn legitimate election results, and working with bar associations to revitalize the disciplinary process so that lawyers, including public officials, who subvert democracy will be punished.
Lawyers take an oath to stand as officers of the court, bound by a code of conduct and ethical requirements that do not apply to the public more broadly. They cannot uphold that duty while lying to the court or the public about the factual grounds for phony claims. The 65 Project will work to hold accountable the lawyers who raise fraudulent claims to overturn legitimate elections results, while also creating a rule-based system to prevent future attempts and to strengthen the mechanisms for accountability and deterrence."
It has nothing to do with intimidating lawyers who defend Donald Trump from liability in his current lawsuits. You may disagree that The 65 Project's focus on lawyers who aided legal attacks on democracy is a worthy goal, but it is not the same thing as denying Trump competent defense counsel in his criminal prosecutions and non-election related civil suits.
The main responsibility for that lies with Donald Trump.
Stormy Daniels lost a defamation suit against him going back to 2018, and even owes him his legal fees. That count is either wrong or seriously dishonest about what counts as "ongoing".
In fairness, it doesn't specify if this is all the suits he was a party to, or only those where he was the plaintiff -- and he personally and not one of his corporations.
And then you'd have to account for the ones dismissed because of bankruptcy, and I imagine that Trump Inc has lost a lot of overdue rent suits because of that, and I'm not even sure how one would account for such things. Or the inevitable "slip & fall" nuisance suits that any property owner will be dealing with.
It would be difficult for anyone to get an honest count.
You could go find some cases he won since 2016, if there were any.
Okay, he's got a 2-77 losing record.
Trump would probably call that 100% better than 1-77!
He really only has to win one libel suit for his "fake news" mantra to have genuine traction.
I see that Trump has appealed the Jean Carroll charade --
https://www.reuters.com/legal/donald-trump-appeals-e-jean-carrolls-833-million-defamation-verdict-2024-03-08/ -- and $63M in punitive damages, I don't think that will stand up. NY requires a "... a high degree of moral turpitude and demonstrate[s] such wanton dishonesty as to imply a criminal indifference to civil obligations”.
When you are talking about someone described as "feminism's answer to Hunter S. Thompson" and who wrote for both Saturday Night Live and Playboy, the bar on moral turpitude is going to be kinda high...
There was also this:
"The uncertainty of whether Trump will be elected in 2024 is reason enough to require liquid collateral to secure the bond, because no surety has had to enforce an indemnification agreement against a president," he said.
The implications of that are rather stunning --- what about a potential President of more modest means who has a mortgage on his primary residence. Someone like a Bill Clinton who was doing OK as a Governor but still... Or Howard Dean who practices medicine along with his wife, they probably did OK but they were in Burlington (VT), not Boston.
Such a shame that he's lost all of them so far, then.
But yes, sure, Trump could stop losing, and then he would be less of a loser. It's theoretically possible. Theoretically.
[sad trombone noise]
He only has to win one libel lawsuit for the source to be forever tarnished,
With cultists like Dr. Ed 2, Trump hasn't even had to win one.
Glad to hear you stopped looking at Fox News, OAN, and other outlets that have lost major defamation cases in recent memory.
"What about a potential President of more modest means . . ."
The dispositive point is straightforward: Avoid sexually assaulting and repeatedly defaming -- including after being punished for earlier defamation -- others.
What does that have to do WITH HAVING A MORTGAGE???
It avoids that kind of ruinous judgment against the person having a mortgage.
It seems settled that Trump lies about his finances and assets, but given the magnitude of his inheritance and grifting I am not confident that either of the initial two defamation judgements against Trump with respect to Ms. Carroll has been ruinous.
The fourth one, though, should be breathtaking!
Until Trump files a verified and detailed financial statement under oath, the only worthwhile thing about his petulant whining about straightforward, common bond requirements is the entertainment value.